Upon entering the Lebanon United Methodist Church in Jackson, Tenn., parishioners quickly realized something wasn’t right.
“The cross on the altar table was turned upside down,” church member Kay Williams told Memphis’ WREG-TV. “And a cross that stays at the front of the church was taken down and also put on the table and turned upside down.”
To recap all that was amiss: The number
“666″ were carved into the church altar along with an upside-down
cross, creating lasting damage to the wood — and the 666th page of an
old Bible was burned. Additionally, the words “smoke meth and
hail satan” were etched into the altar.
Lebanon United Methodist is small, with only about 20 members.
A welcoming place, its front doors are
left unlocked so the faithful can come and pray at will. But it’s that
openness that led to the weekend’s disturbing events.
openness that led to the weekend’s disturbing events.
So far, the church is being pretty forgiving, despite the fact that those responsible have not yet been detained.
“We don’t hate them, we still love them. Cause they’re a child of God,” Williams told WREG.
The Madison County Sheriff’s Office
believes that this latest incident is one in a series of other local
church break-ins. Now, the pastor is faced with a choice: Should the
church now lock its doors and abandon the open policies it has espoused
for decades?